The Indiana Supreme Court issued two disciplinary opinions Wednesday, including a decision in which the justices suspended
an Indianapolis attorney for at least 18 months, citing his “serious deficiencies in representing clients and himself.”

Indianapolis attorney and blogger Paul Ogden has been suspended for 30 days by the Indiana Supreme Court based on comments
he made regarding a judge who presided over an estate case involving Ogden’s client.

One of Indiana’s most familiar legal names – a frequent flier on buses, billboards and TV commercials –
says enforcement of disciplinary rules governing attorney advertising is a mess and needs an overhaul. The Indiana State Bar
Association is considering preapproving ads.

The Indiana Supreme Court has suspended Indianapolis attorney and developer Paul J. Page from the practice of law for at least
two years, although one justice thought he should be disbarred. The suspension stems from his guilty plea to one count of
wire fraud in 2013.

An Indianapolis attorney who ran for elected office multiple times has resigned from the bar rather than face a disciplinary
charge that he added a demand for a fee to a client’s proposed criminal plea agreement.

An attorney who continued to practice law despite being suspended in Indiana has been disbarred by the Indiana Supreme Court
for his “on-going, pervasive and deliberate” violations of the suspension order.

A recent Indiana attorney disciplinary order quickly prompted some analysts to predict the ruling would have a chilling effect
on lawyers here and around the country. But the case also involved pursuit of discipline that a court-appointed hearing officer
called “disconcerting.”